30 Day Courage Building Plan & Practice Toolkit For SSB Interview Aspirants

Here’s a complete set for building and practicing the Officer Like Quality (OLQ) of Courage for SSB Interview Aspirants: 30-Day Courage Building Plan Day Challenge...

Here’s a complete set for building and practicing the Officer Like Quality (OLQ) of Courage for SSB Interview Aspirants:

30-Day Courage Building Plan

DayChallenge / Task
Day 1Step out of comfort zone: initiate a difficult conversation.
Day 2Share a strong opinion in class/group.
Day 3Face a fear (e.g., heights, public speaking).
Day 4Accept a challenge or responsibility you usually avoid.
Day 5Initiate a discussion with a stranger (college/street/helpdesk).
Day 6Volunteer for a leadership role (group task or class activity).
Day 7Watch a documentary on war heroes and reflect on acts of courage.
Day 8Speak up against a wrong, even in a small way (e.g., littering).
Day 9Take the first step in resolving a personal conflict.
Day 10Join or start a physical challenge (e.g., trekking, 5K run).
Day 11Practice staying calm in a tense situation.
Day 12Participate in a debate or extempore contest.
Day 13Express disagreement respectfully with an authority figure.
Day 14Help someone in distress, even if it’s awkward.
Day 15Public speaking: Speak on stage or record a video.
Day 16Simulate a high-pressure decision-making task.
Day 17Share a personal failure and what you learned.
Day 18Stand up for someone else’s rights in a peer group.
Day 19Handle rejection and try again (e.g., competition, opinion).
Day 20Tackle a challenging physical workout.
Day 21Be the first to volunteer in a new project/team.
Day 22Address a classroom or family issue constructively.
Day 23Take an unpopular but ethical stand.
Day 24Practice SRTs based on fear-confrontation scenarios.
Day 25Help someone outside your social circle.
Day 26Handle a mock interview with tough personal questions.
Day 27Participate in a group task that involves uncertainty.
Day 28Handle criticism without reacting emotionally.
Day 29Execute a plan that you’ve been procrastinating on.
Day 30Reflect and write about your boldest act in the last 30 days.

Real-Life Moral Dilemmas to Practice Courage

  1. You witness your best friend cheating in an exam. Will you report it?
  2. Your team leader asks you to lie to save the group. What do you do?
  3. You find a wallet full of cash on the street. No one notices. What do you do?
  4. You’re told to skip safety steps to complete a task faster. Do you comply?
  5. You see a stranger being harassed in public. Do you intervene?
  6. You’re wrongly accused by your teacher. Do you stay silent or speak up?
  7. Your group mocks a new classmate. Will you stand with the newcomer?
  8. You’re told to remain quiet about a colleague’s harmful behavior. Do you speak out?
  9. You’re offered a reward to remain silent about a misconduct. Do you accept it?
  10. You fail a task your team was counting on. Do you admit your mistake or blame others?

Instructions: Think through each dilemma. Write your response, justification, and how it reflects courage.

Mock SRT Set Focused on Courage Testing

  1. She hears a scream from a deserted alley on her way home. She…
  2. Her teammate froze during the group task. She…
  3. She is the only person who notices someone drop a suspicious object on a bus. She…
  4. During a trek, one of the members slips and hangs from a cliff. She…
  5. She’s asked to participate in a national-level competition she feels underprepared for. She…
  6. She is asked to hide her friend’s mistake which could risk the project. She…
  7. She sees someone stealing during an exam. She…
  8. Her opinion is ridiculed in a GD. She…
  9. Her sibling is being treated unfairly by a teacher. She…
  10. A bully starts targeting her in class. She…

How to Use This Toolkit

  • Reflect Daily: Use a notebook or journaling app to record what task you did, how it felt, and what you learned.
  • Self-Evaluate: Rate your courage level (1-10) before and after the challenge.
  • Apply in GD & GTO: During Group Discussions or outdoor tasks, step up, take initiative, and voice your opinion when it matters.
  • Practice SRTs regularly: Use the mock SRTs above and craft short, action-oriented responses.
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Anuradha Dey

Senior Lecturer, SSBCrackExams, M.A.(Psychology), M.A. English (Gold Medalist) from BHU; B.A. Hons from St. Xavier’s College (Kolkata). Poet, Writer & Translator. Certified Career Counselor. Knows Mandarin, German, English, Bengali & Hindi.

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